| Week
14: |
Practicing
Tonglen |
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As I listen to reports of the torture
of prisoners in Iraq, I feel a deep sadness. A friend of mine, another trauma therapist,
works with people who have been victims of political torture, and
I have thought of her many times recently. I’ve thought
of the immensity of the challenge of helping people to heal and re-enter
their lives after the enormity of humiliation and pain that come with
torture. I’ve thought of the impact on the families of
those who have suffered such humiliation and pain, and of the difficult
journey from hatred and overwhelm back into a resilient life. I’ve
also thought about the people participating in torturing and humiliating
others, and wonder about how they will feel as they become more
aware of what they have done.
With all this, I have found myself returning
again and again to the practice of Tonglen meditation. The process of transforming
suffering into compassion is a fundamental Buddhist practice. Without
having to adhere to any specific beliefs found in Buddhism, we have
an opportunity to draw from this practice a stance that allows us
to be present to terrible experiences in a more empowered way. In
Tonglen, we breathe in the suffering in the world and breathe out
ease, with the intention that this practice actually transforms the
suffering as we breathe in and out. We recognize how our own
suffering connects with the suffering of others, and heal ourselves,
as well. The meditation itself has been posted in prior experiments,
and is also on the Meditations page of the website. Here, I
want to talk about the challenge of being present to unthinkable
events, and to being willing to engage in a process of acting to
transform the energy of those events.
One of the reasons I inevitably turn
to Tonglen meditation in times of distress is that it allows
me to be fully present to what is without having to hide from it or
fend it off, and yet also allows me to feel that I can do something
meaningful. It’s a way of softening
into awareness that would otherwise be intolerable, and allows me
to acknowledge what is actually unfolding in our global human community
without closing off my heart space. As you read these words,
notice what happens in your body, and how you feel emotionally. If
you find any places inside that tighten, notice your experience if
you were to invite them to soften. If feelings come up, notice
what happens if you soften into them, as well. Then, as you
begin to breathe in that suffering – your own and that of so
many people in the world – notice what happens in your body
and emotions. Give yourself some time with this process, as – with
time – the body-mind begins to settle into the rhythm of the
breath and the quality of compassion.
And so, for this week’s experiment, I invite you to think
about people all over the world who have suffered – and currently
suffer – from political torture, and to be willing to breathe
in their suffering and breathe out compassion and ease, sending these
qualities to them as you do so. At the same time, recognize
that you breathe into your own suffering and offer yourself the same
compassion and ease. This may be a difficult practice because
it asks you to be fully present to what is happening currently with
the prisoners in Iraq, and to imagine people in other places in the
world who also are suffering, or have suffered, from political torture. The
key here is that the experiment invites you to be present to these
awful events in order to offer your breath in service to transform
suffering, rather than to feel helpless in the presence of events
you can’t control outwardly.
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